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| Trevor Fitzroy | |
|---|---|
![]() Trevor Fitzroy | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Marvel Comics |
| First appearance | The Uncanny X-Men #281 (October 1991) |
| Created by | John Byrne Jim Lee Whilce Portacio |
| In-story information | |
| Species | Human Mutant |
| Team affiliations | Xavier's Security Enforcers Upstarts Hellfire Club Summers Rebellion |
| Notable aliases | Chronomancer, White Rook |
| Abilities |
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Trevor Fitzroy is asupervillain appearing inAmerican comic books published byMarvel Comics. The character is usually depicted as an enemy of theX-Men, in particularBishop. Created byJim Lee andWhilce Portacio, he first appeared inThe Uncanny X-Men #281 (October 1991).
Fitzroy hails from the samedystopian future as Bishop. A mutant criminal, he possesses the ability to absorb energy from human beings and use that energy to opentime portals, which is how Bishop traveled to the present. He has since been featured as the main adversary in the series featuring Bishop.
Trevor Fitzroy was revealed to be the illegitimate son of Anthony Shaw, the future Black King of theHellfire Club, in a dystopian future. He joined the Academy for Xavier's Security Enforcers (XSE) and had a romantic relationship withShard. However, Fitzroy's criminal tendencies surfaced, resulting in his expulsion from the academy. Initially, his influential father attempted to shield him, but when Fitzroy was apprehended for murder, his father could no longer protect him. Bishop (Shard's brother and an XSE officer) captured and arrested Fitzroy.
Initially, Fitzroy believed that he possessed the ability to teleport. However, a clandestine faction of XSE agents called the Xavier's Underground Enforcers (XUE) uncovered his true power of time travel. The XUE recruited Shard and orchestrated Fitzroy's release, intending to exploit his temporal abilities to alter the past and create a better future. However, Shard, recognizing Fitzroy's inherent danger, intervened and thwarted their plan, resulting in Fitzroy's return to prison.
From prison, Fitzroy escaped to the present time with his mutant minionBantam. There, he became involved with a group known as theUpstarts, a competition set up bySelene to eliminate her rivals in the Hellfire Club.[1][2]
How he survived is left unknown, but Fitzroy eventually reappeared under the thrall of Selene as the White Rook of the Hellfire Club. During this time, he cooperates with Pierce and Shaw, despite his previous attempts to kill them. He leaves the club and travels back to an alternate future (Earth-9910), now calling himself theChronomancer. He takes control of the new timeline, but Bishop arrives and fights Fitzroy, eventually killing him.[3]
A younger, benevolent version of Fitzroy appears as a participant in the Summers Rebellion. After Cortex kills him during a fight,Layla Miller resurrects him physically but is unable to revive him with a soul, establishing the point at which he becomes a villain.[4][5]
InX-Men (vol. 7), Fitzroy resurfaces and begins killing mutants, which helive-streams on social media.[6][7][8][9]
Fitzroy possesses the mutant ability to drain the life force of living beings through physical contact. With these energies, Fitzroy can create portals that can teleport those passing through them across time and space, yet the portals are one way; trying to pass through the wrong way results in the traveler's body being fatally transformed. He was often dependent on the mutant Bantam to direct and catalog his portals.
In early appearances, Fitzroy wore futuristic battle armor that increased his strength. This battle armor was destroyed by the X-Men, and a second suit of armor was destroyed by the X-Force.
Fitzroy also had severalSentinels that obeyed his commands. These Sentinels were smaller than the 20th-century type but could repair themselves using material in their vicinity.
Trevor Fitzroy appears inX-Men '92.[10]

Trevor Fitzroy appears in theX-Men: The Animated Series episode "One Man's Worth", voiced by an uncredited actor.[11][12] This version's energy-absorbing abilities are non-lethal, and instead leave those they affect comatose for several days.
Toy Biz produced anaction figure of Trevor Fitzroy in 1994 as part of the fourth X-Men wave.[citation needed]